Vietnam lambastes China for fishermen harassment, island
building
Vietnamese troops
stand at attention while listening to Philippine military officials before
the start of their Friendship Games at Northeast Cay in the disputed East Sea
on May 27, 2015. Vietnamese and Philippine troops played soccer and sang
karaoke on an East Sea island in May in a sign of the growing security
ties between the two Southeast Asian nations most at odds with Beijing over the
contested waterway. Photo: Reuters
Vietnam said on Thursday that China had
detained 17 Vietnamese fishermen and their two fishing boats, but so far has
only released the crews and one vessel.
"Vietnam
demands that China immediately and unconditionally release the [other]
fishing vessel,” Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokesman Le Hai Binh said at a
press briefing Thursday.
The
Vietnamese embassy in China
said June 19 that China
had confirmed the arrest of 17 fishermen and two fishing vessels hailing from
the north-central province
of Quang Binh.
Four Chinese
vessels, including a navy one, on June 6 intercepted and captured the
Vietnamese boats and their crews as the latter were in waters 10 nautical
miles southwest of the coast of China's
Hainan Island.
Binh said
Thursday that after the incident, the foreign ministry had asked its embassy
in Beijing to
work with relevant Chinese agencies to demand that they release the
fishermen.
All 17
fishermen and one vessel have returned home safely, Binh said.
He said the
ministry was also verifying information that the Chinese authorities had
compelled the Vietnamese fishermen to sign a document acknowledging China’s self-proclaimed sovereignty over the East Sea,
the Vietnamese term for the South China Sea.
China
routinely outlines the scope of its territorial claims through maps featuring
a “nine-dash line” that encircles about 90 percent of the
3.5-million-square-kilometer resource-rich East Sea.
The maps flew in the face of competing claims from four members of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) -- Vietnam,
the Philippines, Malaysia, and Brunei -- and drew international
condemnation.
The latest
arrest came on the heels of Vietnamese allegations that China had attacked its fishermen in three
separate incidents in the East
Sea since early June.
Vietnam
accused China
of intercepting its vessels and fishermen, seizing their catch and fishing
equipment, and using water cannon to drive away a Vietnamese fishing boat.
On Thursday,
Binh, the Vietnamese foreign ministry spokesman, also demanded that China halt its massive land reclamation
projects in the Spratly islands in the East
Sea that has been underway over the
past two years and further pitted Beijing
against its Asian neighbors.
But the call
has appeared to fall on deaf ears, as always.
Chinese
Foreign Ministry has said that the reclamation projects on seven reefs and
atolls will be completed soon and will follow up with building infrastructure
for military and civilian purposes.
Between the
devil and deep blue sea
In May, Vietnam protested and dismissed China’s annual two-and-a-half ban on fishing
ban in the East Sea, saying violates Vietnam's sovereignty over the
Hoang Sa (Paracel) island chain.
The
municipal administration of Haikou in Hainan, China’s
southernmost province, on May 16 clamped the annual ban in northern part of
the East Sea. The affected areas, stretching to
the waters between Guangdong and Fujian provinces, entail the Paracel island chain,
which China took from Vietnam by force in 1974 and the Scarborough
Shoal, a disputed reef in the Spratly Islands China has seized control since
2012, and the Gulf
of Tonkin.
The ban,
which was introduced in 1999 and will last until August 1, applies to both
Chinese and foreign boats fishing in the area.
China
has said the ban is aimed at protecting marine resources and promoting
environmental awareness among fishermen. That is also China’s
“international responsibility and obligation,” its foreign ministry said.
But analysts
do not buy into this.
“Like every
nation, China
has a responsibility under international law to protect he ecological health
and fish stocks in its waters, especially migratory fish on which neighboring
states also reply. But that obligation is supposed to be fulfilled in
consultation with neighbors, not arbitrarily,” Gregory Poling, a Southeast
Asia analyst at the Washington-based think tank Center for Strategic and
International Studies, told Thanh Nien News.
“And it is
certainly not within China’s
legal rights to enforce a fisheries ban in waters over which there is an
active dispute. Even more worrying is that the ban includes at least some of
the waters in the Gulf of Tonkin on which China
and Vietnam
reached a fisheries agreement in 2000,” he said.
Analysts say
for the Vietnamese government, ignoring China’s fishing ban and insisting
that its fishermen have a right to do so is important because it allows Hanoi
to point out that it has consistently objected to, an certainly has never
recognized, Chinese jurisdiction in these disputed waters. For Vietnamese
fishermen, this is simply a matter of economic necessity.
In July
2014, Vietnam's
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung promised to make VND4.5 trillion ($206
million) available to help Vietnamese fishermen build better fishing boats to
protect themselves from Chinese attacks and other threats.
But given
that hundreds of Vietnamese fishermen and their crews have fallen prey to China's increasingly aggressive patrols around
the disputed islands in the East
Sea over the past
years, they are proving yet again extremely vulnerable to future harassment
or attacks by the Chinese.
“Why should
we expect some new behavior from China?” said Zachary Abuza, a
US-based analyst.
By An Dien, Thanh Nien News
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